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The phrase "crawled from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone or something emerging or coming out of a place, often in a slow or laborious manner.
Example: "After the long hike, she crawled from the dense underbrush, exhausted but exhilarated."
Alternatives: "emerged from" or "came out of".
Exact(58)
I became a worm that crawled from here to there.
Haider Kassim, 11, crawled from the carnage, his leg shredded by shrapnel.
When he crawled from his hiding spot he found his mum Marcela drowned in tears.
Bloody victims crawled from mangled train cars and staggered into the streets.
The victim crawled from the parking lot into an apartment, leaving a trail of blood behind him.
Women covered in dust crawled from the rubble wailing as others wandered through the streets holding hands.
At one point, an Iraqi man crawled from a bunker waving a white flag, followed by several others.
They crawled from the venue on all fours, uncontrollably weeping and soiling themselves all the way home.
I crawled from my tent to find him pumping the camp stove, his furred red face grinning ear to ear.
While play continued, Sydor crawled from the boards toward the Dallas net, forcing the officials to stop play.
It was only when Wes's voice rose to a brimstone roar that Pill crawled from her mother's lap and climbed onto Lady Macbeth's back.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com